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64 comments
  • I prefer they don't. I've worked in places that allowed dogs, and mileage varies. Some dogs are adorable and well behaved, but then you have annoying ones. I hate trying to think how to solve something and be randomly interrupted by barking.

  • If a workplace:

    • Does not routinely interact with the public/people outside the company (ex: delivery people)
    • Has all members give equally respected, explicit consent (so new hires has the negotiations start over) for which dogs and how long and off limits areas and dog owners know they are responsible for routine cleaning and general animal care
    • Is not my workplace

    Then sure, have fun.

    Otherwise no. For the sake of those with allergies, those with a fear of dogs (some), those who can’t stand the noise/smell/distraction (me), it’s cruel to impose your pet upon others in places where that is not the default; if you work at a pound that’s different. If you need accommodations, by all means, seek those out, but those should aim to negatively affect other people as little as possible.

  • Everybody bringing their pet in a corporate environment with lots of employees sounds like a nightmare. But I work at a small company and one of my colleagues used to bring their sausage dog to work, and everyone loved it

  • Our dog comes to our restaurant everyday. she's either upstairs out of the way or in the back patio during service. When she is in the back patio, the amount of people who stop to pet & spoil her is incredible. At the end of service her job is to clean the floor of spilled food, she is quite skilled. She also cleans the street around the terrace seating onnour way home. She's old, fat & happy. She's the best.

  • This is a tough one for me... on one hand, I've had multiple jobs where I can bring my dog/s with me (construction and delivery) which was amazing. Having your best friend with you all day is pretty fun.

    On the other hand, it's completely unacceptable to inconvenience others just so I can bring my dog with me.

    I'd say it's cool if you're in a position where it doesn't affect others.

    That being said, in canada, now most major big box stores allow dogs in (not even service animals, just dogs trained enough to be polite in public) which has cut down on the amount of dogs left in hot/cold vehicles

  • I prefer one dog for the whole place. But if everyone could bring a dog and there were cubicles or offices, keep your dog in your own area unless you are coming or going.

    Also, I would require a behavior test. Good mmanners, no aggression, no accidents, and no incessant barking.

    If all that criteria were met, then 100% yes.

  • One dog in my current line of work is too much already usually. However I always love it and makes me happy to give my attention to a pup. But I'd say in general no. Too many cooks.

  • It depends on the workplace.

    In an office environment, fine. Are you a sex worker in a brothel? Then maybe best to leave your Good Boy at home.

  • My work allows dogs. I’d say there’s probably about 8-10 dogs that are regulars, most of which don’t come in every single day, but a few do. We’re hybrid, so at most they’re in office 3 days a week. There is a whole section in our handbook regulating bringing dogs in, so it’s not a free for all by any means. And people use common sense, I’ve yet to see someone trying to make it work with an ill behaved dog. I might hear a woof or bark on somebody’s way in maybe once a month.

    It’s great! I love getting to see dogs at work! The policies we have are pretty explicit about keeping your dog in your office and supervised at all times (except for going in/out, or bringing them to meetings presuming that whoever you’re meeting with is comfortable with it.)

    Idk if I have any allergic coworkers, but it’s not like I’m bumping into pups in the hall non stop, and they’re pretty good about accommodating various needs. I can’t imagine they would refuse someone asking for a different office if they wanted to move because the next guy over brings his dog often. The whole setup is far less dramatic than people might assume. It’s still a place of business, not a dog park.

64 comments